Recently updated on April 15, 2024Work in the IT field means being constantly surrounded by gadgets and social media: calls with clients,…
4 steps to create a perfect software development budget accumulated from KindGeek’s 6-year software developing expertise.
Mobile Payments Gateway Integration: How to Choose and Integrate Payments Into a Mobile App
7 Mins read
Whether you’re developing an investment app or a mobile marketplace, you need to integrate payment gateway in a mobile app.
3 Best Payment Gateways for Small Business
7 Mins read
In this article, we will explore the 3 best online payment gateways for small businesses that can grow together with your small business and ensure your customers’ data security.
Recently updated on July 8, 2024Does managing business finances make you feel like you’re juggling dozens of balls in the air? There…
Great Chief Technical Officer (CTO) is quite a rare individual to find considering that, on top of being a good leader, such a person should have deep technical knowledge, a diverse spectrum of skills, and a ton of hard-earned experience. In addition, the battle-hardened candidate for a CTO position is well-aware of his or her value, has an intense drive to work on interesting projects, and has a privilege to be a picky person.
Not so long ago, we created an article for the clutch.co, “How to Create a Cost Estimate of a Software Project.” Estimation is a meticulous process, which is hugely responsible for the future success of the development process as well as for saving a client’s time. Therefore, we decided to elaborate on this theme more and provide you with 5 tips that will help ensure your estimates are accurate and fireproof.
Sometimes, people use the label “Business English” as an excuse to write/say fancy sentences saturated with synonyms from Thesaurus, complicated constructions, and unnecessary passive voice. Such sentences create the dragon that kills the liveliness of the language and makes our sentences clumsy, redundant, and sometimes difficult to understand. It alienates a writer from the audience.
In the article “QA is the New Black,” we argued that the “new-age” Quality Assurance professionals should ensure the test-driven development throughout all stages of a product’s life-cycle, starting from the conceptual level. Threat modeling is a powerful methodology that complements the test-driven development and can elevate the security and quality of a product to a whole new level.